After a resounding electoral victory on 4 July, the Labour party now face the reality of government.
Sir Keir Starmer and his cabinet have all been hyperactive in their early days in office, keen to assure voters that the ‘change’ they promised was no empty slogan.
None has been more animated than the new Foreign Secretary David Lammy, who is keen on moving from the “inward-looking” years of Conservative rule to “reconnecting Britain with the global community.”
Reconnecting in a substantial way may prove challenging while Starmer’s fiscal conservatism and focus on Britain’s domestic troubles limit both budget and bandwidth.
The new UK government must prioritise its objectives abroad. How might it do so, and what obstacles might it face?
Honing a strategy
Britain’s two most important historical relationships—with Europe and the US—will remain the top priority.
Resetting Britain’s relationship with the EU after years of hostility following Brexit is also at the heart of Labour’s strategy.
Lammy underlined this by jetting off to Berlin on Day 1. There, as in accompanying visits to Poland and Sweden, he said he wanted to “put the Brexit years behind us,” as quoted in The Guardian.